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Darren Aronofsky On 'The Wrestler'
DAVE DAVIES, host:
This is FRESH AIR. Iâm Dave Davies, senior writer for the Philadelphia
Daily News, filling in for Terry Gross. Our guest, Darren Aronofsky,
directed the film âThe Wrestler.â Its leading actors, Mickey Rourke and
Marisa Tomei, earned Oscar nominations, and Rourke won a Golden Globe
for his performance.
Rourke plays Randy - The Ram - Robinson, a wrestler who was a star in
the â80s and is now living in a trailer park, wrestling for small change
with newcomers and has-beens in high school auditoriums and American
Legion halls.
Heâs physically and emotionally broken but refuses to give up wrestling
because itâs the only thing he does well and the only place he feels
appreciated.
The person heâs closest to is a stripper, played by Marisa Tomei, whoâs
also getting too old for the job. The wrestling matches may be fixed,
but the Ram is still subjecting his failing body to enormous punishment
in the ring.
Aronofskyâs scenes reveal how the fights are pre-planned but also show
how much real pain the wrestlers inflict on each other. Terry spoke to
Darren Aronofsky in January. Hereâs a scene just before one of the
small-time wrestling matches. The promoter is backstage, telling the
wrestlers what the line-up is.
(Soundbite of film, âThe Wrestlerâ)
Unidentified Man #1 (Actor): (As character) All right, FLG(ph), where
are you? Youâre up first against TVS(ph).
Unidentified Man #2 (Actor): (As character) Thank you.
Unidentified Man #1: (As character) Second weâve got Havoc and
Colebean(ph) versus Billy the Kid and Lex Lethal.
Unidentified Man #3 (Actor): (As character) What I gotta do tonight?
Unidentified Man #1: (As character) Third, Sapiens(ph) versus Devon
Moore(ph). Fourth, Judas the Traitor versus Rob Echoes(ph).
Intermission. Fifth, Kevin Matthews(ph) versus Inferno. Sixth, weâve got
Sugar and DJ High versus the Funky Samoans. Seventh, Paul E. Normous and
Andy Anderson versus Jim Power and Pappa Don(ph). And last but not
least, for the strap weâve got Tommy Rotten versus Randy the Ram. All
right, you guys got it?
Unidentified Men (Actors): (As character) Yeah.
Unidentified Man #1: (As character) All right, letâs do this.
TERRY GROSS, host:
Darren Aronofsky, welcome to FRESH AIR. You know, I wouldâve assumed
that if someone made a movie about wrestling that it would be a kind of
satirical, campy film since a lot of wrestling, particularly wrestling
in the â80s, was so campy, but your film isnât campy at all. Itâs got a
lot of heart, and itâs got real emotional and physical pain.
Letâs start with the story behind the idea for the film. Why did you
want to make this film? How did you get the idea for it?
Mr. DARREN ARONOFSKY (Director, âThe Wrestlerâ): I think it started with
an observation a long time ago that no oneâs ever made a serious film
about wrestling, and I think that is because most people perceive
wrestling as a joke because itâs fake, and they sort of write it off.
In fact, most people, while I was working on this film, were saying what
exactly are you doing with Mickey Rourke? And they really didnât get it.
But the more I looked into it, the more interesting it got because you
meet these guys, and theyâre 300 pounds, and theyâre jumping off the top
rope, down 10 feet into a pile of concrete, and you know, you canât find
me anyone whoâs not going to feel that the next day.
So that whole line between whatâs real and whatâs fake started to become
really interesting.
GROSS: Now, I also think itâs really interesting that your movie, âThe
Wrestler,â focuses on washed-up, broken-down wrestlers who are in
chronic pain.
Mr. ARONOFSKY: Yeah.
GROSS: These are â theyâre not people who are in their prime anymore.
They play these, like, little matches in recreation centers and American
Legion halls. Why did you focus it on broken-down wrestlers?
Mr. ARONOFSKY: Well, it came out of the kind of economic approach of the
film. I knew it was going to be a low-budget film for several reasons,
but when we first started, to be honest we were thinking a more-
traditional route of, you know, a 20-something, 30-year-old movie star
doing this, but it became pretty clear that working the WWE at the
beginning might not give the type of creative control I would need.
GROSS: Oh man, I bet theyâd want a lot of money because everything is
just so marketed and franchised.
(Soundbite of laughter)
Mr. ARONOFSKY: Yeah.
GROSS: They own a piece of everything. I donâtâ¦
Mr. ARONOFSKY: But Vince actually â Vince McMahon saw the film, and he
called both me and Mickey and was really, really touched by it, and we
were very nervous wondering what he would think, but he really, really
felt the film was special, and having his support meant a lot to us,
especially to Mickey.
GROSS: And he kind of controls the wrestling world.
Mr. ARONOFSKY: Pretty much. I mean, definitely everything that most
people know about wrestling comes out of what Vince McMahon did, but
thereâs this whole other world of wrestling for people who arenât
working, you know, that mainstream but still want to wrestle, thatâs the
independent circuit, and itâs how wrestling used to be before it was all
kind of combined into one sort of national league.
So after we realized that, I started to think of it first as a period
piece because before the WWE existed, there were all these territories
out there, you know, in the â70s and â80s - early â80s - but once again,
budget-wise I didnât think I could do that, either.
So then I started going to these independent shows, which exist all over
the country, and theyâre actually really interesting because they have a
lot of up-and-coming wrestlers, guys who, you know, want to go to the
big league, and then they also have, you know, people that will never
make it, and then they also have a lot of these legends that were huge
back in the day, you know, men and women that would sell out Madison
Square Garden and the L.A. Forum night after night after night who
basically are working for $500 a night in front of 200, 300 people. And
suddenly that became a really kind of intriguing story.
GROSS: Wrestling is really like the theater of cruelty and suffering,
and I think thatâs really what you capture in the movie, and one of the
most amazing scenes is a match between Randy, the Mickey Rourke
character, and the Necro Butcher, Keith Dylan Summers, whoâs a real
wrestler who plays himself in the movie.
Mr. ARONOFSKY: Yeah.
GROSS: And I didnât realize that wrestling â I watched wrestling in the
â80s, and I havenât kept up with it, and I didnât realize it had gotten
this hardcore where, like, the Butcher uses a staple gun with these,
like, big staples and barbed wire, and itâs a real bloody affair.
Before we talk about it, I want to just play a clip from the movie. And
this is like backstage, so to speak, before the actual match between
Randy the Ram and the Necro Butcher. And theyâre talking to each other,
trying to, you know, like plan a little bit what the match will be like.
And the Necro Butcher speaks first.
(Soundbite of film, âThe Wrestlerâ)
Mr. DYLAN SUMMERS (Actor): (As Himself) Anything you need me to do, sir,
just maybe keep the running to a minimum. Like maybe I can hit the ropes
once, take a bump for you, but like no criss-crossing please. Itâs
hardcore stuff for me with you. Talk to me about it. What do you want to
do tonight? Are you cool with the staples?
Mr. MICKEY ROURKE (Actor): (As Randy Robinson) Staples?
Mr. SUMMERS: (As Himself) Staple gun.
Mr. ROURKE: (As Robinson) What do you mean?
Mr. SUMMERS: (As Himself) Like staple gun.
Mr. ROURKE: (As Robinson) Staple gun.
Mr. SUMMERS: (As Himself) You never did it before?
Mr. ROURKE: (As Robinson) No. Does that hurt?
Mr. SUMMERS: (As Himself) Silly question. Man, no so bad going in, kind
of scary. You know, youâve got a big metal thing up against you. Pulling
them out, theyâre going to leave a couple little holes, a little bit of
blood loss there.
Mr. ROURKE: (As Robinson) Rock and roll.
Mr. SUMMERS: (As Himself) Thank you, sir. Itâs an honor.
Mr. ROURKE: (As Robinson) Take it easy with that staple gun.
Mr. SUMMERS: (As Himself) No problem, sir.
GROSS: One of the amazing things about this is that hereâs, like, you
know, the Butcher talking about how heâs going to use the staple gun,
and itâs going to hurt, and heâs calling him sir, and you know, anything
you need me to do, sir. Itâs just such an odd mix. Is this a typical
pre-match kind of conversation?
Mr. ARONOFSKY: You know, I mean itâs definitely pushed a little bit for
the audienceâs sake. Wrestlers do discuss what theyâre going to do
beforehand. We might have spelled it out a little bit more, but that
scene was actually not scripted. That was purely improvised.
We shot every wrestling scene in the film, we shot in front of live
wrestling audiences with real wrestlers. So everyone Mickey Rourke
wrestles is a, you know, is a real-life wrestler, as you said.
And so while we were waiting for our chance to get out there because
there was a match going on, I had some time to kill, and I was like hey
Mickey, go over to Necro and just start a conversation, and it kind of
evolved into that.
And I said oh yeah, that partâs great, and then we did another take, and
thatâs what you see. Itâs only two, three takes. And what was great
about working with these wrestlers is that, you know, theyâre as much
athletes as they are actors, you know.
When youâre backstage, itâs you know, like being backstage at a theater
more than it is being backstage at a sporting event, and so they were
very natural in front of the camera and very realistic, and so that was
a lot of fun, all the improvisation and stuff that could go on back
there.
GROSS: Iâm going to ask you to describe that match between, you know,
the Mickey Rourke character and the Necro Butcher. Itâs the most, I
think, brutal, painful match in the movie. So Iâd like you to describe
what happens and how you shot it.
Mr. ARONOFSKY: Well to begin, you know, Necro Butcher is a real kind of
underground cult American hero. Heâs a real wrestler, and heâs always
top billing at every wrestling event he goes to. And he basically gets
flown around the United States to come to these events, and people go
crazy for him.
Theyâre very much into his type of wrestling, and itâs an interesting
form of wrestling, a kind of â I have a whole theory about it. You know,
wrestling got really bloody in the late â90s because â I think it had to
do with the simultaneous announcement by the WWE that wrestling was
entertainment. And I think once the whole idea that this was
entertainment and not, you know, an athletic contest, the audience knows
that, and the audience is in on it.
What makes it interesting, I think, for certain parts of the audience is
the level of violence that these men do to each other, and so when we
start to do this film, I knew that would be a really important part
because it is a big chunk of the independent wrestling circuit.
So basically Mickeyâs character, the Ram, goes to one of these hardcore
matches, one of his first, and basically these guys bring their own
weapons that they buy at a 99-cents store or a hardware store into the
ring, and they proceed to, you know, use those different tools on each
other, and you know, this happens in real life all the time, and they
even have events where the audience is encouraged to bring their own
weapons, and then the wrestlers use those against each other, you know,
just to prove to people that thereâs very little trickery going on.
GROSS: So in this match, the Necro Butcher actually uses this really big
staple gun.
Mr. ARONOFSKY: Yeah, yeah.
GROSS: And he staples right up and down Mickey Rourkeâs back, and then
thereâs like barbed wire that theyâre using on each other and get caught
in and a plate-glass window one smashes over the otherâs head. I mean,
itâs really brutal. But then thereâs this amazing scene afterwards, you
know, backstage, so to speak, after the fight, when you see Mickey
Rourkeâs back after all the staples have been pulled out, and itâs just
so painful to look at it.
Mr. ARONOFSKY: Right. Yeah, well thatâs sort of what these guys go
through. And itâs funny. You know, at the premiere a few weeks ago, we
invited all these famous legends to come and see the film, and there was
a guy who you may remember - Greg the Hammer Valentine - and he told me
that he actually wrestled with Dylan, the Necro Butcher, two weeks
earlier.
So itâs â you know, I think itâs â theyâre out there just trying to
entertain, trying to hold onto their glory, trying to remain relevant
and, you know, at the cost of their health.
GROSS: So tell me what you learned about the stunt where, you know, the
wrestler - in this case Mickey Rourke â because this is one of his
specialties in the movie. He climbs on the top rope and positions
himself, kind of shows his muscles and then dives ontoâ¦
Mr. ARONOFSKY: Head first.
GROSS: Yeah, onto his opponent, whoâs laying there, in quotes helplessly
on the floor of the ring. Like, what did you learn about how to do that
without killing yourself or killing your opponent?
Mr. ARONOFSKY: Well, you know, they are â most of the time, if itâs done
right, you know, the wrestler whoâs leaping lands. His knees will hit
first so that, you know, thereâs not direct impact of that force hitting
the other guy.
Once again, this is, you know, the creative wrestlers protecting their
opponent. I mean, kind of the rule number one is to take care of your
opponent. So you know, often these guys are taking the hits themselves
to put their opponents over, is how they put it.
Itâs a really interesting thing. I mean, itâs a lot of history to it, I
think. I really wasnât able to track down where wrestling comes from as
far as, you know, this type or form of wrestling. Of course, Greco-Roman
wrestling is ancient, but I have a feeling it was â you know, they speak
this language thatâs got its own words.
Itâs almost like a carnie language. You know, they call the audience the
mark. Thereâs terms for keeping all the wrestling secrets secret. They â
you know, the performance is the show, and the good guys are baby-faces.
The bad guys are heels. And itâs all about their secret language so that
no one knows.
So I think it came out of, you know, the strong men fighting each other
back in the sideshow days. And so itâs got a long history, and because
of that, theyâve got their own kind of communicational language, and
that was what was interesting is how much of a world it is.
DAVIES: Director Darren Aronofsky. More after a break. This is FRESH
AIR.
(Soundbite of music)
DAVIES: Weâre listening to Terryâs interview, recorded in January with
director Darren Aronofsky. He directed the film, âThe Wrestler,â which
is coming out next week on DVD.
GROSS: Your interest seems to be beyond the theater of wrestling. I
mean, I think youâre really interested in the human body and what it can
endure and what it means to suffer pain, what the body can take and what
it canât take. Yes?
Mr. ARONOFSKY: I think thatâs a â I donât know how much conscious I am
going into it. I know these themes are, you know, I think how people
manipulate their bodies to make art is pretty interesting.
I see â for me, I think you can take the word wrestling out of this film
and change it with any art or any vocation that someone is passionate
about, and you know, the story rings true.
Itâs funny. When I was on the road doing the film in Dallas, I met a
preacher who was, I donât know, in his 50s, and he said, you know, from
the beginning of the film he started crying because he just so connected
with the Ramâs story. And how he connected it with, was that, you know,
heâs watching his own congregation shrink, as everyone wants to get a
younger and younger preacher.
And so â and he had just told his wife recently how heâll be preaching
'til thereâs only one person left in the stands. So itâs kind of a
similar story.
GROSS: That leads me right into my other favorite scene. Like, one of my
favorite scenes is that really violent one that we just talked about.
And then thereâs another scene where itâs a legends-of-wrestling
signing, and these like washed-up wrestlers are there with their videos
and their T-shirts to autograph for fans and to sell.
Theyâre selling the T-shirts. Theyâre selling the autographs. You know,
for a price you can get a picture taken with them. And so theyâre in
this like what â is it a high school gym or rec centerâ¦
Mr. ARONOFSKY: Yeah, that was a veteransâ hall.
GROSS: A veteransâ hall. So itâs this, you know, little place. And you
know, like a handful of fans are showing up, and the wrestlers are so
over the hill. Like one of them I think has a prosthetic leg, and one of
themâs in a wheelchair. Theyâre yawning; theyâre sleeping. No oneâs
there for the autograph, and itâs a great scene about what itâs like to
still be selling the autographs when no one much wants them anymore.
Mr. ARONOFSKY: Yeah, well that comes directly out of something I
witnessed. One of the first research trips I did, me and my co-producer,
Mark Heyman, went to an event out in Jersey, and there were so many
legends there, from Captain Lou Albano to Rocky Johnson, whoâs the
Rockâs dad, to Jimmy Superfly Snuka.
They had a ring set up in the middle, and there was all these legends,
and less people came to that than came to the amount of extras I had in
that scene. And it was heartbreaking. Itâs ah, you know, these guys just
trying to make ends meet, trying to live their past glories and just
trying to hold on to the dream. And I just knew we had to do that scene
after I witnessed it.
GROSS: Mickey Rourke got an Academy Award nomination for his performance
in the film. Itâs an incredible performance because he has so much heart
and also does a lot of the stunts himself. And Iâm sure he did a lot of
suffering during the making of the movie.
How did you choose him? I had read that you were first going to go with
Nicholas Cage and then decided to go with Mickey Rourke.
Mr. ARONOFSKY: Yeah, it was actually always Mickey - from the point
where we got the idea for him. And the problem was, no one in the whole
entire world wanted to finance the movie with him.
Basically how financing for movies works is, you go into the
international market, and depending on who the movie star is - and what
the project is and who the director is, but really the movie star - you
basically can, you know, get loans off of what people promise to pay for
it internationally.
But the problem was Mickey was actually pretty much a negative in
getting this film made. And I think thatâs because, you know, where his
status as a movie star was â it just had fallen so much, and⦠But he
just made so much sense for me. But after about a year and a half of,
you know, no after no after no after no, I started to get a little antsy
because I didnât think the film was going to happen.
And there was a small flirtation with another actor, but ultimately⦠And
that ended up getting picked up because once you start doing something
with a movie star, you know, they donât write about the year and a half
of struggling to make a film with Mickey Rourke. They write about, you
know, the flirtation with the movie star. That makes the front page.
GROSS: Well, why did you know Mickey Rourke was going to be right? It
turns out you were correct.
Mr. ARONOFSKY: I donât know. You know, I was a big fan. When I was a
kid, I can remember the exact moment of seeing âAngel Heartâ in the
theater and just being blown away by him. And I was a big fan through
âBarflyâ and his other work, and I think like a lot of people, you just
wondered what the hell happened to him. And you know, I think Adrian
Lyne told him that if he had died back then, heâd be bigger than James
Dean. And itâs pretty cruel, but thereâs something â I mean, thatâs how
huge of a star he was.
You know, and on the promotion, you know, talking to â you know,
promoting the film, Iâve gotten the chance to talk to Sean Penn and
Benicio Del Toro and Brad Pitt, and theyâre all â you know, Mickey was
the guy. But he just sort of disappeared.
And I think when I met Mickey, I thought â I knew he had been an
athlete, you know, because of the boxing story - that he went and became
a boxer was very well known. So I thought that might help. And also just
sitting with him.
You look into his eyes. And you know, his body is just all this armor,
and he wears all these outfits, and itâs all about keeping people away
from looking in his eyes. Because the second you look into his eyes,
itâs just thereâs so much there that it was really exciting as a
filmmaker.
And if I have any great accomplishment on this film, itâs the fact that
Mickey Rourke never wore a pair of sunglasses in the entire film.
(Soundbite of laughter)
Mr. ARONOFSKY: Which you show me another film where that happened, and â
I donât think it exists.
(Soundbite of laughter)
DAVIES: Director Darren Aronofsky with Terry Gross, recorded in January.
Aronofskyâs film, âThe Wrestler,â is out on DVD next week. Heâll be back
in the second half of the show. Iâm Dave Davies, and this is FRESH AIR.
(Soundbite of song, âThe Wrestlerâ)
Mr. BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN (Singer/Songwriter/Musician): (Singing) Have you
ever seen a one trick pony in the field, so happy and free? If youâve
ever seen a one trick pony then youâve seen me. Have you ever seen a
one-legged dog makinâ his way down the street?
DAVIES: This is FRESH AIR. Iâm Dave Davies in for Terry Gross. Weâre
listening to Terryâs conversation with Darren Aronofsky, the director of
the film âThe Wrestler,â which comes out on DVD next week. Mickey Rourke
was nominated for an Oscar for his performance as Randy âThe Ramâ
Robinson, a washed up wrestling star now reduced to matches in high
school gyms and recreation centers. His personal life is as broken as
his body. He lives alone in a trailer park and his only friend is on
over the hill stripper who feels she has to treat him like a customer.
Hereâs a clip from the film. In this scene, heâs trying to reconcile
with his estranged adult daughter. Heâs taken her to the boardwalk where
they used to go when she was a child.
(Soundbite of movie, âThe Wrestlerâ)
Mr. MICKEY ROURKE (Actor): (As Randy âThe Ramâ Robinson) I just want to
tell you. Iâm the one who is supposed to take care of everything. Iâm
the one who is supposed to make everything okay for everybody. But it
just didnât work out like that. And I left. I left you. You never did
anything wrong. I used to try to, forget about you. I used to try to
pretend that you didnât exist, but I canât. Youâre my girl. Youâre my
sweet â youâre my little girl. And now, Iâm an old broken down piece of
meat. And Iâm alone. And I deserve to be all alone. I just donât want
you to hate me.
DAVIES: Mickey Rourke in a scene from âThe Wrestler.â Letâs get back to
Terryâs interview with the filmâs director Darren Aronofsky.
GROSS: Mickey Rourke has said that you were very hard on him while he
was making the movie. What did he mean?
Mr. ARONOFSKY: Well, you know Mickey is blessed with more talent in his
pinky than most of us have in a lifetime. And so itâs very easy for him
to coast through his work and I think thatâs what weâve seen for the
last 10-15 years. And to be honest, Iâd say Mickey worked really hard on
this film but he didnât give me everything. I mean he says he gave me
everything and he probably did but thereâs even more in there and thatâs
how talented he is. He is so gifted but because he is, heâs just little
bit afraid of it and - and also, you know, it just hasnât been put to
the test. And so if anything, my biggest job was just to push, pull,
encourage, inspire, challenge, you know, for him to really, really dig
deep.
GROSS: Well, he has the kind of muscle in this film that you usually
need steroids to get and his character does shoot steroids in order to
get his muscles. So what does he do to get the muscle legally?
(Soundbite of laughter)
Mr. ARONOFSKY: He worked really hard. He - I mean, since it took a year
and half to raise the money and he knew about it for that long - it was
ultimately about two years he had to start thinking about it - he hired
this really hard core trainer who is a former Israeli commando, who was
a former cage fighter. And the guy just took no BS and he lifted twice a
day. Eight â drank about 7,000 calories a day and was always walking
around with one of those shakes. And the thing is Mickeyâs dad, his real
dad, was actually Mr. New York bodybuilder. And so I think itâs â heâs
always been kind of a gym rat. So heâs in that culture.
GROSS: Marisa Tomei, I read that you went to high school with her.
Mr. ARONOFSKY: We went to the same high school. I was friends with her
brother. She was already kind of a legend when I was there because she
was on TV and stuff.
GROSS: Oh, I see.
Mr. ARONOFSKY: She was pretty famous. But - and then, you know, as I
made a film or two in the business, I got to meet her and weâve just
been very friendly for years.
GROSS: She, in the movie, plays a pole dancer and lap dancer who works
at a, you know, a strip club that Mickey Rourkeâs character goes to and
he really loves her and she feels something for him but heâs a customer.
Soâ¦
Mr. ARONOFSKY: Right.
GROSS: â¦thereâs nothing that she can really express. And like him, sheâs
kind of washed up. Sheâs still working but the customers consider her
old and it â thereâs some terrific scenes on the pole because thereâs
times when she is really getting into the pole dancing and other times
when itâs so clear that sheâs doing it quite mechanically. You do this
motion, you do that motion. You look and see if anybody is interested.
And I guess Iâm wondering what kind of advice you gave her about when
she was doing it just mechanically and disengaged - to make it look as
disengaged as she was feeling.
(Soundbite of laughter)
Mr. ARONOFSKY: You know, I think she â you know, Marisa took a role that
could have been done very one dimensionally and she added a lot of
dimension to it. Because for me, her character was always kind of as
much a love interest as a mentor for Mickeyâs character. And that she
was going through the same thing, kind of this line between whatâs real
and whatâs fake. There was the, you know, the realness of her real life
outside the club, and then this fantasy life of the club and it kind of
connected very well with âThe Ramâ Mickey Rourkeâs character - the
wrestlerâs struggle of whatâs real and fake. And the wrestler kind of,
has confused, you know, whatâs real, his real life versus his life in
the ring, while sheâs kind of set up these real boundaries to separate
and to keep herself healthy. And sheâs really trying to get more into
her real life and sort of leave her fantasy life behind. And so all of
her scenes with Mickey are about that line and she just added this, you
know, real complexity to it where she kind of floated between being
engaged, to being, you know, completely outside of it and above it.
And for me she was almost like â I call it like a drunken tightrope
walker. You know, sheâs on that tightrope that line and yet, you know,
what makes her performance dynamic and exciting is you just donât know
which way she is going to fall.
GROSS: Thereâs so many similarities you make between the wrestler and
the stripper, they both have stage names. They both have to do their
hairâ¦
(Soundbite of laughter)
GROSS: â¦put on make up. You know âThe Ramâ Mickey Rourkeâ¦
Mr. ARONOFSKY: They both (unintelligible)â¦
GROSS: ⦠has to shave his armpits.
Mr. ARONOFSKY: Yeahâ¦
(Soundbite of laughter)
GROSS: You know â you know, they both have choreography.
Mr. ARONOFSKY: Yeahâ¦
GROSS: And they both have a different personality in the ring than â or
in the club than outside of it. Did you intentionally want to make sure
that there was a scene where Mickey Rourke was shaving his armpitsâ¦
(Soundbite of laughter)
GROSS:â¦just to show how cosmetic you have to be and the similarities
between, you know, what a stripper would go through or what a woman
would go through and what the wrestlers go through?
Mr. ARONOFSKY: Youâre actually the first to point out that connection. I
think in the script, it was that he had to shave his chest. And Mickey
was - Mickey was against that, shaving his chest, because he was like,
you know, thereâs certain secrets, blah blah blah. And I said, you know,
what? Then shave your underarms. And he couldnât deny it because he
realized that â in many ways, it was more revealing and embarrassing,
yet you know it happens. So, he went for it. But that was kind of the
whole spirit of the whole film is me and Mickey kind of - there was just
a lot of improvisation always, and Mickey bringing his own expertise and
his own history to it and then sort of happy accidents happened where,
you know, the connection between, you know, their underarm hair is made
for someone like you.
(Soundbite of laughter)
GROSS: Another great scene I have to ask you about is in the
supermarket, thereâs a period which, you know, The Ram, the Mickey
Rourke character is â is unable to work as a wrestler.
Mr. ARONOFSKY: Yeah.
GROSS: And so heâs working at the end of deli counter at an Acme
Supermarket. Andâ¦
Mr. ARONOFSKY: In â in Bayonne, New Jersey.
GROSS: Yeah, I was wondering where it was because it looks like itâs a
real supermarket.
Mr. ARONOFSKY: Oh yeah, oh yeah.
GROSS: And I read that some of the customers were real too.
Mr. ARONOFSKY: Yeah, well, the whole thing was - you know, we didnât
have enough money to close down the supermarket or even close down the
meat deli counter where weâre shooting. So people were coming up and
asking for, you know - and all those other workers behind, you know,
with Mickey were the actual employees, you know. And so I just â I was
like hey Mickey, just go serve these people. And so he was game and, you
know, that was once again, you know, a lot of improvisation and Mickey
bringing his own spirit to the screen.
GROSS: So, what did the customers think that. They must have seen the
camera. Did they know that they were shooting a movie? Did they know
that was Mickey Rourkeâ¦
Mr. ARONOFSKY: Yeah.
GROSS: â¦behind the counter serving them?
Mr. ARONOFSKY: I think thatâs the advantage of having someone like
Mickey Rourke at that point of his career is that most people, with his
hair up in a hair-bun, arenât going to recognize him and even if they
do, theyâre not going to be screaming through the aisles, you know, for
an autograph. So, people were very - they were kind of natural, you
know. And with so much reality TV going on and so muchâ¦
GROSS: Mm-hmm.
Mr. ARONOFSKY: I think people are really comfortable now and they just
donât care. So, you know, they were just, you know, that woman who is
asking for the fried chicken was just a woman who came up and, you know,
she said give me two big breasts and Mickey made up the line, thatâs
what Iâm looking for two big breasts with a brain, you know, and that
was just â it was perfect but it just happened.
DAVIES: Darren Aronofsky speaking with Terry Gross. He directed the film
âThe Wrestler,â as well as âRequiem for a Dream,â âPiâ and âThe
Fountain.â More after a break. This is FRESH AIR.
(Soundbite of music)
DAVIES: Letâs get to our interview with Darren Aronofsky. His film âThe
Wrestlerâ comes out next week on DVD.
GROSS: Now, I have to say your film seems so about painâ¦
(Soundbite of laughter)
GROSS: â¦pain and drugs. In âPi,â the main character whoâs really into
math and how math can, like, describe the world and explain patterns in
the world. And - but he has these terrible migraines which is how the
movie starts. In your film âRequiem for a Dream,â which is an adaptation
of a Hubert Selby novel and he also wrote âLast Exit to Brooklyn,â you
know, thereâs drug addicts, the mother is addicted to amphetamines and
the Jared Leto character whoâs a heroin addict, I mean, he gets this
horrible infection in his arm from shooting up with dirty needles and
toward the end, he injects himself right into the heart of the
infection.
GROSS: And ends up having his arm amputated at the end. I mean like I â
tell me that Iâm wrong, but it seems to be between that and âThe
Wrestlerâ that you are interested in pain.
Mr. ARONOFSKY: Have you not seen âThe Fountainâ?
GROSS: I have not seen âThe Fountainâ, is there more pain in that?
Mr. ARONOFSKY: Oh.
(Soundbite of laughter)
Mr. ARONOFSKY: No, you should see it. Itâs my romantic film.
GROSS: Oh, oh I see. Okay.
Mr. ARONOFSKY: Yeah, yeah, yeah. But you should go see that. I mean
there are actually â thereâs, kind of, drugs and thereâs different type
of pain as - broken heart pain in that one. I donât know, the connection
between the three films. Itâs so, you know, people see different things.
You know, between - you know, itâs funny someone was talking about how
fall - all my characters fall at the end. You know, âRequiem for a
Dreamâ Jared Leto falls. In âThe Wrestlerâ he falls and in âThe
Fountainâ Hugh Jackmanâs character falls. So, I donât know, people see
different things and, you know, Iâm just happy that people are making
connections between the films, that thereâs a sense that Iâm not losing
myself as I get older through this life.
GROSS: Oh, tell me youâre not interested in pain. I just would find that
impossible to have made these movies and not thoughtâ¦
Mr. ARONOFSKY: Wellâ¦
GROSS: â¦a lot about that.
Mr. ARONOFSKY: â¦youâre â youâre talking about physical and emotional
pain? Or you talking aboutâ¦
GROSS: Iâm talking about both but I think thereâsâ¦
Mr. ARONOFSKY: Yeah.
GROSS: â¦thereâs a real strong feeling about physical pain throughout
your films - with the exception of a film which I havenât seen.
Mr. ARONOFSKY: Well, I guess. Yeah, I donât â I couldnât tell you that
itâs something that Iâm focused on. And when I approach this, Iâm -
thatâs like the thing thatâs pulling me to the subject matter. It must
just somehow come out in the work. You know, people talk about that
thereâs obsession in there and the struggle between people choosing
their real life versus their art. So, thereâs lots of different themes I
think. But I would say I approach a project thinking about the emotional
and physical pain of the characters before going in. I do think that,
you know, the emotional end of it is very, very important because you
want people to connect with these characters and feel for these
characters and be touched by them hopefully.
GROSS: Your cinematographer is best known for documentary films for
âTaxi To The Dark Sideâ and âEnron: The Smartest Guys in the Room.â Why
did you want to use a documentary cinematographer?
Mr. ARONOFSKY: Well, Maryse Alberti, she was not only had she done great
documentaries to add to that list she also did âCrumb.â
GROSS: Oh, thatâs a great film. Yeah.
Mr. ARONOFSKY: Yeah, a great film. She also before that did a lot of
narrative film. She worked with Todd Haynes on âVelvet Goldmine,â and
she shot âHappinessâ for Todd Solondz.
GROSS: Oh, wow.
Mr. ARONOFSKY: So she had this independent, you know, narrative
experience as well as documentary experience. I always knew I wanted to
bring a verite style to this film. Itâs how I was trained when I was in
film school and itâs something I havenât done in a really long time, and
itâs â I almost did a documentary instead of this movie. I just sort of
wanted to get back to grounding myself in reality. And so that was the
approach. I wanted that immediate energy approach of the film. And I
just wanted that feeling when we went into those wrestling worlds, when
went into the wrestling ring itself, that we were really there.
And she was great because she just was game to shoot anything, anywhere,
anytime.
GROSS: My guest is Darren Aronofsky. He directed the new film âThe
Wrestler.â You grow up in Brooklyn. I think both of your parents were
high school teachers?
Mr. ARONOFSKY: No. My mom taught at Public School 206 on Neck Road.
Gross: Oh, wow. I know Neck Road.
(Soundbite of laughter)
Mr. ARONOFSKY: And my dad taught at Bushwick High School, which I think
at the time New York Post said it was the worst high school in North
America.
GROSS: It was a dangerous school.
Mr. ARONOFSKY: Yeah, it was pretty dangerous back in the day. Now itâs
all filled with, you know, hipsters, but back in the day wasnât too
good.
GROSS: And your father could handle it?
Mr. ARONOFSKY: Heâs a big guy. Unfortunately, I didnât inherit his
shoulders. I got his height but not his shoulders.
GROSS: You know, it sounds like you had, you know, a very middle class
upbringing, but, you know, filmically like youâre interested in Hubert
Selby, who writes novels about people who are like down on their luck
and addicted and desperate; and you know, âThe Wrestlerâ also about, you
know, someone whoâs broke and - you know, physically, emotionally and
financially.
Mr. ARONOFSKY: Well, if you saw âThe Fountainâ â itâs about a middle
class scientist.
(Soundbite of laughter)
Mr. ARONOFSKY: Middle upper class. But - and you know, Brooklyn is one
of those rare places where, you know, you could be in a sort of middle
class neighborhood, which is I guess where I grew up was, but you know,
the guy - I guess three kids that were my age that grew up, you know,
two of them are in jail and one of them is dead. You know, half of my
friends became stockbrokers and half of them became drug dealers. And
then, you know, that was my neighborhood. You know, you go five minutes
outside of the neighborhood and itâs a whole different world.
So its not - you donât really live in a bubble when youâre in Brooklyn.
Youâre kind of â itâs - even if your section is one thing, itâs kind of
a big mix that you canât escape.
I mean when I was in college I drove a - what they call, you know, a car
service type of thing in the neighborhood. And I couldnât believe it,
but literally a five-minute walk from my house where I grew up was one
of the big, you know, crack supply, you know, spots, and I would be
driving people to get their stuff. Itâs just a - itâs a very strange
place, Brooklyn, in that way.
GROSS: Now, at the Golden Globes, when Mickey Rourke won and he was at
the mike, I forget exactly what he said about you, a kind of loving,
sarcastic thing.
Mr. ARONOFSKY: Yeah.
GROSS: And in return you gave him a finger, and the camera was on you.
Mr. ARONOFSKY: Thatâs a loving sarcastic return for â for Brooklyn.
GROSS: Exactly, right, exactly. But the camera was on you and Iâm sure -
tell me what the producers of the Golden Globes, or the network that
carried it had to say about it. Anything?
Mr. ARONOFSKY: I havenât heard anything. I mean I had a big smile on my
face, and I mean for me, Mickey - weâre old friends and that actually
means I love you between us. So it was done with a lot of love.
GROSS: Well, thank you so much for talking with us.
Mr. ARONOFSKY: Thank you for having me.
DAVIES: Director Darren Aronofsky speaking with Terry Gross. Aronofskyâs
film âThe Wrestlerâ is out next week on DVD. Coming up, David Edelstein
on the new Russell Crowe film, âState of Play.â This is FRESH AIR.
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Vast Conspiracies, Just Waiting To Be Exposed
DAVE DAVIS, host:
Film critic David Edelstein has a review of âState Of Playâ - a new
political thriller adapted from a 2003 BBC mini-series. The setting has
been changed to Washington and stars Russell Crowe and Ben Affleck.
DAVID EDELSTEIN: The American version of âState Of Playâ feels creaky
and nostalgic. Itâs as if the filmmakers are pining for the days when
journalists were all that stood between us and an alliance of the
military industrial complex and crypto-fascist politicians. Theyâd like
to bring back the atmosphere of Watergate and âAll The Presidentâs Men.â
The reporters played by Russell Crowe and Rachel McAdams are
photographed through windows or from high above or behind cars in
underground garages, as if someoneâs always watching, while in the
background loom icons like the Washington Monument to remind us how
American ideals have been perverted.
For a while, itâs gripping stuff. And Croweâs edginess gives the
convoluted plot a charge. The problem is, the filmmakers arenât remaking
âAll The Presidentâs Men.â Theyâre remaking a six-hour British mini-
series with a different thrust. Both versions of âState Of Playâ center
on university pals whoâve gone different ways. Cal McAffrey is a scruffy
journalist, and Stephen Collins a slick, ambitious politician. An aide
to Collins, his mistress, it turns out is murdered. Itâs a PR disaster,
and Cal is torn. He wants to help his friend clear his name and he wants
to get the story.
The mini-series was an ensemble piece and a portrait of two machines,
one investigative, one legislative. It was also a paranoid conspiracy
thriller that opened with a murder. But you sense that in the end it
wouldnât come down to a chase or gun battle, that the answers would be
in the charactersâ faces, in secrets even close friends couldnât detect.
The new script by Matthew Michael Carnahan, Tony Gilroy and Billy Ray
makes the reporter more of a lone wolf. Gone is the give-and-take among
multiple characters that gave the newspaper scenes texture. Itâs also a
stew of topical headlines - the unchecked power of a Blackwater-like
security firm, the financial straits of daily newspapers, the rise of
gossipy bloggers.
The allusions add punch, and the Watergate tropes ratchet up suspense.
But they prime you for a more conventional thriller. Everything added
turns out to be beside the point. The point is blunted, anyway, because
the new âState Of Playâ is a study in starsâ non-combustion. Crowe and
Ben Affleck as Collins donât fit together. They donât inhabit the same
existential space. Crowe is a transformer. His actorâs DNA changes in
every role. And you always feel his mind racing. Whereas Affleck is
slack-jawed, dopey, not quite broken in. Heâs temperamentally suited to
the part.
His opaque, Al Gore-ish affect is the reason, we infer, his character
went into politics. But his wheels turn too slowly to keep up. Crowe is
doing all the acting.
(Soundbite of movie, âState Of Playâ)
Mr. RUSSELL CROWE (Actor): (As Cal McAffrey) (Unintelligible) one way or
another, they got 40 billion good reasons to want you out of way. You
got to go on the record (unintelligible) you got to protect yourself,
man.
Mr. BEN AFFLECK (Actor): (As Stephen Collins) You go out there, find me
evidence linking Soniaâs death to PointCorps. I will go on the record, I
will shout this thing from the rooftops.
Mr. CROWE: (As Cal McAffrey) I can do that.
Mr. AFFLECK (Actor): (As Stephen Collins) Alright. I got to get back.
Iâll be in touch.
Mr. RUSSELL CROWE (Actor): (As Cal McAffrey) Stephen?
Mr. BEN AFFLECK: (As Stephen Collins) Yeah.
Mr. RUSSELL CROWE (Actor): (As Cal McAffrey) Just watch your back.
EDELSTEIN: The music under that scene is one way director Kevin
Macdonald gives the illusion of momentum. And until the climax, the
movie does fly along with excellent actors bobbing in and out. It was a
neat idea to make McAdamsâs character a cheeky blogger and an insult to
Calâs journalistic scruples. Although after a good confrontational
start, she settles into the role of sidekick. Robin Wright Penn brings
amazing depth of emotion to Collinsâs wife. Forced to stand by her man,
she evokes the poor spouse of Eliot Spitzer after his prostitution
scandal. As the editor of the Washington Globe, Helen Mirren is
perfection.
Watch how abruptly she shifts from solicitous to chummy to imperious -
anything to get what she needs from her reporters and keep her
endangered newspaper afloat. But the climax to which the movie builds is
in this context a non-event - feeble, spurious, and so 1974. âState Of
Playâ is like a time bomb thatâs never dismantled but never explodes.
DAVIS: David Edelstein is film critic for New York magazine. You can
download podcasts of our show at fresh.npr.org.
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Transcripts are created on a rush deadline, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of Fresh Air interviews and reviews are the audio recordings of each segment.